Category: Politics

Transportation commissioner billed taxpayers for trips while advocating for auto industry by Jay Root, The Texas Tribune Jan. 9, 2018 Before billionaire Warren Buffett learned that his new Texas car dealerships had a big problem with the state’s protectionist auto laws, his company had a small problem with them. Read more…

Montgomery County 3:PM Today The Gregory Parker Campaign released the following comments to County Citizen regarding the attack website gregoryparker.net. The political disclaimer on site has been recently updated to read POLITICAL ADVERTISING PAID BY BRIAN DAWSON CAMPAIGN. To which Parker’s only comment was, “Well that says it all.” Parker Read more…

BRIAN DAWSON “I OWN IT” Yesterday we reported the discovery of a political attack site gregoryparker.net directed at Candidate for Montgomery County Commissioner Pct #2 Gregory Parker. Although the site registration was kept private meta information on the site suggested some connection with a competing candidate for the same seat, Read more…

buchanan.org/blog/judge-moore-gods-law-127700 9/28/2017 By Patrick J. Buchanan When elected chief justice of the Alabama Supreme Court in 2000, Judge Roy Moore installed in his courthouse a monument with the Ten Commandments that Moses brought down from Mount Sinai carved into it. Told by a federal court his monument violated the separation Read more…

By Erin Georgen When a developer in Texas wants to avoid the cost of doing business they simply hire a company to provide voters to ‘pass’ the cost onto future residents. Voter fraud and election fraud isn’t just one thing. It comes in a variety of shapes and sizes. By Read more…

This according to ABC 13 At a press conference days after the flood, Martin questioned the SJRA’s decision making of when it chose to release water and how much. The organization said in a statement the comments that day led to harsh backlash. “A number of statements were made in Read more…

During a trial in which a Montgomery County man was accused of illegal voting in a special utility district, the defense counsel questioned the validity of two voters who were said by the state to have voted legally in the same election.
Like the defendant, the legal voters were temporary residents.
But, “they had money,” said David Glickler, the lawyer representing the state Attorney General’s office.
Such is the power in special districts around the state, often outposts of undeveloped land that are owned by developers, who in turn create mini-governments that tax new residents to cover the costs of development.